Abstract

Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) relates key cosmological parameters to the primordial abundance of light elements. In this paper, we point out that the recent observations of Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies by the Planck satellite and by the BICEP2 experiment constrain these parameters with such a high level of accuracy that the primordial deuterium abundance can be inferred with remarkable precision. For a given cosmological model, one can obtain independent information on nuclear processes in the energy range relevant for BBN, which determine the eventual ^2H/H yield. In particular, assuming the standard cosmological model, we show that a combined analysis of Planck data and of recent deuterium abundance measurements in metal-poor damped Lyman-alpha systems provides independent information on the cross section of the radiative capture reaction d(p,\gamma)^3He converting deuterium into helium. Interestingly, the result is higher than the values suggested by a fit of present experimental data in the BBN energy range (10 - 300 keV), whereas it is in better agreement with ab initio theoretical calculations, based on models for the nuclear electromagnetic current derived from realistic interactions. Due to the correlation between the rate of the above nuclear process and the effective number of neutrinos Neff, the same analysis points out a Neff>3 as well. We show how this observation changes when assuming a non-minimal cosmological scenario. We conclude that further data on the d(p,\gamma)^3He cross section in the few hundred keV range, that can be collected by experiments like LUNA, may either confirm the low value of this rate, or rather give some hint in favour of next-to-minimal cosmological scenarios.

Highlights

  • Big-bang nucleosynthesis (BBN, see e.g. Ref. [1] for a recent overview) offers one of the most powerful methods to test the validity of the cosmological model around the MeV energy scale

  • Assuming the standard cosmological model, we show that a combined analysis of Planck data and of recent deuterium abundance measurements in metal-poor damped Lyman-alpha systems provides independent information on the cross section of the radiative capture reaction dðp; γÞ3He converting deuterium into helium

  • The result is higher than the values suggested by a fit of present experimental data in the BBN energy range (10–300 keV), whereas it is in better agreement with ab initio theoretical calculations, based on models for the nuclear electromagnetic current derived from realistic interactions

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Big-bang nucleosynthesis (BBN, see e.g. Ref. [1] for a recent overview) offers one of the most powerful methods to test the validity of the cosmological model around the MeV energy scale. The uncertainty on the cross section is at the level of 6–10% when fitting SðEÞ with a polynomial expression This translates into a theoretical error on the primordial 2H=H ratio of the order of 2% (for a fixed value of the baryon density and Neff), comparable to the experimental error in the above cosmological determination (2) or astrophysical determination (3). By plugging the theoretical estimate of the cross section into a BBN code one finds that more deuterium is destroyed for the same value of the cosmological baryon density, and the predicted primordial 2H abundance results to be smaller [13].

THE PRIMORDIAL DEUTERIUM AS A FUNCTION OF COSMOLOGICAL
DATA ANALYSIS METHOD
RESULTS
CONCLUSIONS
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